A couple of decades ago, we rented a Gite in rural Normandy for a week, and discovered Breton Whisky in the local Carrefour Supermarket. As I recall, it was inexpensive, something like 15-20 euros a bottle. I am always up for a novelty - so I packed a bottle in my bag for the trip home. The French generally do things very well, or not at all, and this was no exception. It is very-very good.
Several times in places that claimed to have an extensive whisky selection I have asked, "do you have any Breton Whisky." The response is almost always a dull stare, only once has the answer been yes.
It is a single malt, the primary grain is malted barley, very much in the style of what is made in Scotland. Light, flavorful, with a little smoky wood in the background. The bottle became a treasure, kept in the back of the cabinet. As the level went down, and I went in search of a restock. Virginia does not offer it - liquor sales in Virginia are run by the state with a large catalog, but few rarities. I found a store in New York city that stocked it. And I have bought a couple of bottles there. The last of those was in the back corner of the cabinet, tasted once in a rare while.
A couple of years ago we were in Provence, and I looked for it, asked about it, and the answer was "that is from Brittany, not here in the south." An honest answer, but it didn't replace my diminishing supply.
A YouTube video recently talked about those open bottles, the special one's saved for just the right moment, sitting there oxidizing in the back row. And the YouTube was right, once in the bottle whisky does not get better, and a partially full bottle is slowly oxidizing. Better to enjoy it while it is at it's best. Hence as I write this I am sipping the last of the last bottle from Nestor in New York.
You can see Washington, DC from the top of the building across the parking lot, and DC has a very liberal liquor sales licensing. As long as the city gets the tax, they don't care how the retailer gets it. (There a several shops that buy and sell unopened rare bottles.)
A careful Google search revealed a couple of places with it on their websites. The first one listed it and showed it as out of stock- they would special order it and let me know when it came in. The second place, a small shop on P Street near Dupont Circle, showed it in stock. They can't ship to Virginia, but I can pick it up. And I did. They had three varieties, the standard bottling, one aged longer, and one finished in sherry casts. And they had it on the shelf, just below a single malt made in India. Talk about a wide selection of rare and exotics. The aged in sherry casts is wonderful.
Friday Face Off:
Nicole at DVArtist, Art, Food, Gardening, regularly features the Friday Face Off, a chance to post a portrait you have been working on.
Here is my latest.



What a treat to be able to find your Breton whiskey. Now do you have any Grey Poupon? Charming portrait.
ReplyDeleteGrainy, Honey, or regular?
DeleteAs you saw from my weekend post. I took a bottle of cognac out with a cordial glass while I did the snow shoveling. Never let it be said I'm not a classy bitch.
ReplyDeleteThe classiest.
DeleteA friend introduced me to single malt scotch many years ago and I found I liked it. I don't drink it often but I enjoy a sip every now and again.
ReplyDeleteWe have a fabulous locally owned liquor store in town that will order anything for you if they don't carry it. I may have to ask for Breton .
Your self-portrait is fabulous, by the way. It captures a bit of whimsy!
Irish Single Malt is also good.
DeleteI'm glad you can still get that whiskey locally. I'm not a whiskey drinker but I have to say, your description makes it sound great.
ReplyDeleteLove the portrait!
I should keep working on painting people.
DeleteBelieve it or not, Dayton, Ohio has one of the top bourbon/whisk(e)y bars in the US. Sounds like a trip in the near future to see if The Century Bar serves Breton whisky.
ReplyDeleteYour self-portrait is wonderful.
It is always fun to ask for/look for the rarities.
DeleteFun portrait ~ Friend used to drink ~ Armourik ~
ReplyDeleteHappy Weekend ~
https://anartistreflects.com
The subject recognized himself.
DeleteGreat!
ReplyDeleteI try,
DeleteI love your self-portrait! And judging from that big smile, you just had a sip of Breton Whiskey!
ReplyDeleteI will keep trying.
DeleteOops! Hey, you know how they say married couples start to resemble each other after a while? Clearly that's what confused me . . . or at least, that's my story and I'm sticking to it!
DeleteI know nothing about whiskey so I will just wish you an enjoyable weekend! I thought your portrait was of your Sweet Bear!
ReplyDeleteYes it is, thank you. I did one of myself a few weeks ago.
DeleteI never associate whiskey with France, but why not. Cheers.
ReplyDeleteIt is a rarity.
DeleteThis is an interesting story about the whiskey. I have never darnk whiskey so I wouldn't know what is good or bad. It sounds like this is a good one. Enjoy. As for your portrait. I love the glasses and his beard has wonderful coloration. Thank you for sharing with FFO and have a lovely weekend.
ReplyDeleteThe glasses make the painting.
DeleteYou are quite the whisky connoisseur David! You communicate your passion convincingly. At first I thought the painting of Wicked Hamster was a photograph! It is so darned lifelike.
ReplyDeleteYou should see him in person.
DeleteI haven't bought any type of alcohol in 2026. Fun little picture of you.
ReplyDeleteIt was a slight indulgence.
DeleteWhat a fabulous face. Nicely done. And I've never had Breton whiskey, but I have had Cape Breton whiskey from Nova Scotia which was tasty but quite pricey. Happy weekend.
ReplyDelete